Edith Wharton's love affair with the French Riviera began in 1919, and continued to the end of her days. She found there a microcosm of the sort of society that had always fascinated her, that she described in her classic novels. Between the two world wars, the whole region was a playground for film stars, magnates, and princesses: her neighbors included Wallis Simpson, Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Cole Porter, and Dorothy Parker. For Edith Wharton, the Riviera was at once a haven where she could write to her heart's content, and a terrifyingly superficial world.
This fascinating book is a study of this world as it existed when Edith Wharton arrived, and how the region changed over the years. Richly illustrated with both contemporary and vintage photographs, it is a hugely evocative portrait of the Golden Age of the Riviera. Edith Wharton on the Riviera is a rare treat: a taste of the fabulous lifestyle of the privileged classes that has now vanished forever.
| introduction |
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7 | (6) |
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the age of innocence (before 1919) |
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13 | (48) |
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The Invention of the Cote d'Azur |
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14 | (12) |
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26 | (3) |
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29 | (4) |
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33 | (13) |
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46 | (4) |
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50 | (4) |
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54 | (7) |
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the gods arrive (1919--1930) |
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61 | (48) |
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62 | (3) |
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65 | (8) |
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73 | (13) |
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86 | (3) |
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Tea Beneath the Palm Trees |
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89 | (6) |
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95 | (14) |
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the house of mirth (1930...) |
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109 | (42) |
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110 | (7) |
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117 | (5) |
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Between Dreams and Reality |
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122 | (10) |
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132 | (15) |
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147 | (4) |
| bibliography |
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151 | (1) |
| picture credits |
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152 | |